From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Lamanna v. DiDonato

Appellate Term of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
May 4, 2007
16 Misc. 3d 15 (N.Y. App. Term 2007)

Opinion

No. 2005-1079 W C.

May 4, 2007.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Justice Court of the Town of Harrison, Westchester County (John M. Voetsch, J.), entered July 22, 2005. The judgment, after a nonjury trial, awarded petitioner possession and the sum of $26,800 in a holdover summary proceeding.

Finger Finger, White Plains ( Carl L. Finger of counsel), for appellants. Cushner Garvey LLP, Tarrytown ( Lawrence A. Garvey of counsel), for respondent.

Before: RUDOLPH, P.J., LIPPMAN and MOLIA, JJ., concur.


OPINION OF THE COURT

MEMORANDUM.

Final judgment reversed without costs and a new trial ordered.

In this holdover proceeding, the petition alleges that occupants are in possession as month-to-month tenants and that landlord terminated their month-to-month tenancy by serving them with a termination notice (Real Property Law § 232-b). On the return date, occupants submitted an answer, which in addition to denying the material allegations of the petition, asserts, inter alia, that they are in possession solely as contract vendees (the performance of which contract was not to be completed within 90 days after its execution [ see RPAPL 713 (9)]) and that they are not month-to-month tenants. The answer also demands a jury trial and sets forth five counterclaims. After affording the parties what it denominated a "mini-trial," at which the only testimony taken concerned the amount of unpaid use and occupancy, the court awarded landlord a final judgment of possession and the sum of $26,800.

We reverse and order a new trial. While it was essentially conceded that landlord was the owner of the subject property, it nevertheless remained landlord's burden to prove his claim that the parties whom he sought to remove were month-to-month tenants, not merely contract vendees in possession, that their tenancy was terminated, and that they held over after the termination of their tenancy without landlord's permission (RPAPL 711; see generally 2 Dolan, Rasch's Landlord and Tenant — Summary Proceedings § 30:1, at 417 [4th ed]). It appears that the court found that a tenancy existed based on a letter referred to by landlord's counsel at the "mini-trial," in which letter occupant Robert DiDonato purportedly acknowledged that the contract of sale had terminated and that he and his wife would remain in possession as tenants. However, the letter was neither authenticated nor admitted into evidence. Moreover, there was no testimony to establish the service of a notice terminating the alleged month-to-month tenancy. Under these circumstances, the final judgment in favor of landlord cannot be sustained.

As to occupants' jury demand, we note that occupants did not object at the "mini-trial" to the court's failure to afford them a jury trial. In addition, occupants did not pay the jury fee. Under the circumstances, a trial by jury was waived ( see UJCA 1303 [e]; Centrifugal Assoc. v Highland Metal Indus., 224 AD2d 254).

Summary proceedings are designed to be expeditious. However, the rudiments of a trial cannot be dispensed with where, as here, triable issues have been raised. In view of the foregoing, a new trial is warranted.


Summaries of

Lamanna v. DiDonato

Appellate Term of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
May 4, 2007
16 Misc. 3d 15 (N.Y. App. Term 2007)
Case details for

Lamanna v. DiDonato

Case Details

Full title:JOSEPH LAMANNA, Respondent, v. ROBERT DIDONATO et al., Appellants

Court:Appellate Term of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department

Date published: May 4, 2007

Citations

16 Misc. 3d 15 (N.Y. App. Term 2007)
2007 N.Y. Slip Op. 27176
842 N.Y.S.2d 674

Citing Cases

Baria v. Lozada

Here, in light of the parties' shared living arrangement, and in the absence of any specific denial of…

7 W. 21 LI, LLC v. Mosseri

); LaManna v. DiDonato, 842 N.Y.S.2d 674, 675 (App. Term 2007) (“[I]t nevertheless remained landlord's…